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Saturday, 04 February 2012 @ 11:26 PM ICT

Killer Stress

HealthStress is a killer, at least for brain cells. A new animal study shows that a single socially stressful situation can destroy newly created neurons in the hippocampus, the brain region involved in memory and emotion.

Although most of the brain stops growing by adulthood, new nerve cells are continually generated in the hippocampus, where they are essential for learning, Scientists have long known that chronic stress can inhibit this neurogenesis and lead to depression. Leading Scientists at the Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and other Scientists wanted to find out how the brain reacted to just a single stressful episode.

The Scientists teams placed a young adult rat into a cage with two older rats quickly began to attack the newcomer. When they removed the younger animal 20 minutes later, the researchers found that its stress hormone level were six times as high as those of other rats that had not experienced the terrifying encounter.

Examining the young rat's brain, they saw that it had produced as many new neurons as its unstressed counterparts. Yet when they repeated the experiment with different rats and examined their brains after a week, only a third of newly generated cells had survived.

The finding that a single stressful event can have an impact on the survival of newborn neurons could lead to new depression treatments for humans, one of the leading Scientist said "It may become possible to prevent that loss because we have found that little window of time to intervene."

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